Showing 1 - 12 results of 12 for search '"Excavation (archaeology)"', query time: 0.08s Refine Results
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    A study in grey: grey literature and archaeological investigation in England 1990 to 2010 by Donnelly, V

    Published 2016
    Subjects: “…Excavations (Archaeology)…”
    Thesis
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    The later Iron Age in central-eastern France by Hummler, M, Hummler, Madeleine

    Published 1986
    Subjects: “…Excavations (Archaeology)…”
    Thesis
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    Primate archaeology evolves. by Haslam, M, Hernandez-Aguilar, R, Proffitt, T, Arroyo, A, Falótico, T, Fragaszy, D, Gumert, M, Harris, J, Huffman, M, Kalan, A, Malaivijitnond, S, Matsuzawa, T, McGrew, W, Ottoni, E, Pascual-Garrido, A, Piel, A, Pruetz, J, Schuppli, C, Stewart, F, Tan, A, Visalberghi, E, Luncz, L

    Published 2017
    “…This work has recently doubled the set of primate lineages with an excavated archaeological record, adding Old World macaques and New World capuchin monkeys to chimpanzees and humans, and it has shown that tool selection and transport, and discrete site formation, are universal among wild stone-tool-using primates. …”
    Journal article
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    Archaeological excavation of wild macaque stone tools. by Haslam, M, Luncz, L, Pascual-Garrido, A, Falótico, T, Malaivijitnond, S, Gumert, M

    Published 2016
    “…<p>More than 3 million years of excavated archaeological evidence underlies most major insights into the evolution of human behaviour. …”
    Journal article
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    Cultural interactions during the Zhou period (c.a. 1000-350 B.C.): a study of networks from the Suizao corridor by Chen, B

    Published 2016
    “…It mainly, but not exclusively, concentrates on bronze ritual vessels from the Suizao corridor, and discusses the underlying social and political relations between the dominant cultures and the regional ones in this particular area (the Zeng state for example), which are central to understanding the ways in which the dominant cultures joined their disparate territories into a whole. Newly excavated archaeological evidence show that there were at least three periods when people in the Suizao corridor learned about the current traditions employed elsewhere, which are: 1) Yejiashan period (from the 11<sup>th</sup> to 10<sup>th</sup> century B.C.); 2) post-Ritual Reform period (from the mid-9<sup>th</sup> to mid-7<sup>th</sup> century B.C.); and 3) Marquis Yi’s period (from the mid-6<sup>th</sup> to mid-4<sup>th</sup> century B.C.). …”
    Thesis
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    Rock art provides new evidence on the biogeography of kudu (Tragelaphus imberbis), wild dromedary, aurochs (Bos primigenius), and African wild ass (Equus africanus) in the early an... by Guagnin, M, Shipton, C, el-Dossary, S, al-Rashid, M, Moussa, F, Stewart, M, Ott, F, Alsharekh, A, Petraglia, M

    Published 2018
    “…<strong>Aim:</strong> Our knowledge of the prehistoric distribution of animal species is so far largely dependent on the location of excavated archaeological and palaeontological sites. In the absence of excavated faunal remains, many species that were present in the Levant and North Africa have been assumed to have been absent on the Arabian Peninsula. …”
    Journal article